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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-13071?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14338439#comment-14338439
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Hadoop QA commented on HBASE-13071:
-----------------------------------
{color:red}-1 overall{color}. Here are the results of testing the latest
attachment
http://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/attachment/12701068/HBASE-13071-v1.patch
against master branch at commit 1c957b65b16a8706caee140c18b84ea48a0dc0aa.
ATTACHMENT ID: 12701068
{color:red}-1 @author{color}. The patch appears to contain 2 @author tags
which the Hadoop community has agreed to not allow in code contributions.
{color:green}+1 tests included{color}. The patch appears to include 4 new
or modified tests.
{color:red}-1 patch{color}. The patch command could not apply the patch.
Console output:
https://builds.apache.org/job/PreCommit-HBASE-Build/12978//console
This message is automatically generated.
> Hbase Streaming Scan Feature
> ----------------------------
>
> Key: HBASE-13071
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-13071
> Project: HBase
> Issue Type: New Feature
> Affects Versions: 0.98.11
> Reporter: Eshcar Hillel
> Attachments: HBASE-13071-v1.patch, HBaseStreamingScanDesign.pdf,
> HbaseStreamingScanEvaluation.pdf
>
>
> A scan operation iterates over all rows of a table or a subrange of the
> table. The synchronous nature in which the data is served at the client side
> hinders the speed the application traverses the data: it increases the
> overall processing time, and may cause a great variance in the times the
> application waits for the next piece of data.
> The scanner next() method at the client side invokes an RPC to the
> regionserver and then stores the results in a cache. The application can
> specify how many rows will be transmitted per RPC; by default this is set to
> 100 rows.
> The cache can be considered as a producer-consumer queue, where the hbase
> client pushes the data to the queue and the application consumes it.
> Currently this queue is synchronous, i.e., blocking. More specifically, when
> the application consumed all the data from the cache --- so the cache is
> empty --- the hbase client retrieves additional data from the server and
> re-fills the cache with new data. During this time the application is blocked.
> Under the assumption that the application processing time can be balanced by
> the time it takes to retrieve the data, an asynchronous approach can reduce
> the time the application is waiting for data.
> We attach a design document.
> We also have a patch that is based on a private branch, and some evaluation
> results of this code.
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